CONTRIBUTED BY A. T. CLAY, W. S., EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND. GROUND
GAME.
Prior to 1880 a tenant had no right to kill game except
rabbits, which he might kill as vermin unless expressly prohibited by his lease,
which was invariably the case, and he had no claim for damages done to his crop
by game unless they had been increased beyond a fair average stock. If the game
was materially increased then the tenant had a right to compensation. The Game
Act of 1877 provided that a tenant was entitled to compensation, where the sole
right of killing rabbits and game was reserved, for damages done to crops in
excess of £40 a year unless any other sum was specified in the lease. The Act
contained rules for fixing the compensation by arbitration. Tenants found that
these claims, however reasonable, were difficult to substantiate and led to a
great deal of ill-feeling. The Ground Game Act of 1880 (being the act now in
force) conferred on occupiers of land the right to take and kill ground game,
hares or rabbits, to be exercised by himself or persons duly authorized by him
in writing, but the express purpose of the act is to enable the tenant to
protect his crops, and his rights are subject to limitations and restrictions.
The question of game is not
referred to in the 1879 Commission, but it is referred to in the 1893
Commission, the final report of which recommends that the right of occupiers to
compensation "for damages to their crops by adjoining owners and occupiers, as
well as by game preserved by their landlords or the shooting tenants, be
recognised and denned and made enforcible by as simple and inexpensive means as
possible." No steps have been taken by the legislature to carry out this
recommendation. Grievance still exists and may be classified under two heads :
1. The harbouring of ground game
in woods to which the tenant has not access or in moorland to which he has not
access until nth December, and
2. The laying down by shooting
tenants, or else by landlords, of an excessive number of winged game so early in
the season as to destroy the corn crops adjoining woods.
On the other hand, tenants now do
what Mr. Clay never did in his lifetime — let their rights to the ground game, a
proceeding that is probably not warranted by the Act, or engage a trapper to
kill them.
HYPOTHEC
The landlord's right of hypothec,
so much referred to in Mr. Clay's speeches and writings, had been greatly
impaired by legislation beginning early in the Seventies, and by the "Hypothec
Abolition Act of 1880 " it was, for all practical purposes, abolished. The
landlord's remedy is now an action of ejection for non-payment of rent under the
Agricultural Holdings Act of 1883, a procedure which is in practice hardly ever
enforced. A fresh iniquity has, however, recently sprung up between the rights
of the landlord and the general creditors in respect that it has been decided
that under certain clauses of the usual lease, on the bankruptcy of a tenant,
the landlord has right to the crops that are at that date growing in the ground.
This has not been used oppressively so far, and was not known in Mr. Clay's
time, as only recent decisions of our courts have developed the view, but it may
come into greater prominence in the future.
AGRICULTURAL HOLDINGS.
This is a subject upon which Mr.
Clay latterly devoted the most of his energies and the results of which have
been of most practical good to the Scotch tenantry. During the passing of the
Agricultural Holdings ( Scotland ) Act 1883 through the House of Commons, he was
in almost constant attendance, giving his practical advice and assistance to the
Lord Advocate of the day, Mr. G. B. Balfour, who was in charge of the bill.
This matter had been dealt with
in England by legislation a considerable period before the Scotch Act was
passed. In 1875 an English Agricultural Holdings Act was passed, mainly at the
instigation of the Duke of Richmond, who was chairman of the 1879 Commission. It
is for this reason that the principal report of that commission deals somewhat
tenderly with this act. The act was, however, not compulsory and landlords and
tenants could contract out of it. It was also defective in attempting to lay
down rules as to the manner in which the sum to be allowed as compensation
should be ascertained, with the result that arbiters were restricted in their
awards to somewhat hard and fast rules for ascertaining compensation. The
principal report in the 1879 commission advises —
1. That the English Act be made
compulsory.
2. That the landlord Or incoming
tenant should pay for only outlays which were valuable to him in the future
cultivation of the farm.
3. That in Scotland the Sheriff
should appoint an oversman or arbiter on the failure of the parties to do so.
Mr. Clay in his supplementary
report objected (1) that the report did not specify or indicate any sufficient
means of affording such absolute security or of giving the tenant that
protection to which he is entitled, nor does it recommend any effectual measure
to secure the whole interests of the tenant in his improvements, including his
interests in his tenure.
(2) That not only tenant's
outlays, but his energy and industry in increasing the fertility of the soil,
should be allowed for and have legislative protection.
(3) That the then Agricultural
Holdings Act did not allow adequate values for improvements and ignored high
cultivation, cleanness and condition of the soil.
(4) That the incoming tenant
should not be burdened with the sum to be paid as compensation to the outgoing
tenant.
(5) That the landlord should be
better protected against dilapidations than was done in the then Agricultural
Holdings Act.
(6) That the mothod of
ascertaining values should be by arbitration, and Arbiters should be selected
for each district by Government, or their selection be put under the
jurisdiction of the enclosure Commissioners.
(7) He further suggested that a
lease might be assigned in special circumstances, the landlord to have the right
of one veto and any subsequent attempt to veto should be decided by the Sheriff.
The legislation which followed in
1883 by the passing of the English Agricultural Holdings Act, and the Scottish
Agricultural Holdings Act of that year, resulted in a large portion of the
English Act of 1875 being adopted, particularly the procedure portion, but the
principle of the act was that stated in head 2 of the main report, and
accordingly the act allows compensation "for such improvement as fairly
represents the value of the improvement to an incoming tenant, provided that in
ascertaining the value of any improvement there shall not be taken into account
what is justly due to the inherent capabilities of the soil."
The third head of the main report
was also adopted, namely, that of applying to the Sheriff failing agreement as
to the appointment of an arbiter or oversman, but the Agricultural Holdings
Amendment Act of 1900 has come very near Mr. Clay's suggestion of selection of
arbiters by the Government, as the Board of Agriculture have now certain
recognized experts in various districts whom they will appoint on application
being made to them. The 1883 and 1900 Acts have also recognized the justness of
the criticism embodied in heads 3 and 6 of Mr. Clay's objections that the method
of ascertaining values under the 1875 Act was inadequate, as this is now left
entirely to the arbiters. The 1883 acts also embodied in a modified way the
suggestion as to the right to assign the lease, this being given in the case of
death only and subject to certain protective clauses on behalf of the landlord.
The Legislature has, however, not yet recognized what is known as increased
fertility, nor provided that the incoming tenant should not have to bear the
burden of the compensation to be paid to the outgoing tenant, if the landlord in
his conditions of let chooses to stipulate for this.
The 1893 Commission was appointed
on 16th September 1893 and reported 25th June 1894. Mr. Clay signed the report
but handed in a Supplementary Memorandum. So far as the Agricultural Holdings
Act is concerned Mr. Clay's proposals are dealt with under the first head in
that Memorandum. These may be summarised as follows :
1. That the procedure of the Act
should be simplified and forms provided so that a Tenant might dispense with
legal assistance, and that any omission in procedure should not invalidate a
claim if the opposite party had not been prejudiced.
2. That the provisions as to
giving notice of claim and counter claim should be abolished.
3. That the Schedules appended to
the Act detailing the subjects of compensation should be done away with, thus
dispensing with the Landlord's consent for drainage and permanent pasture and
leaving it to the Arbiter to say what is an improvement and worthy of
compensation.
4. That Official Arbiters should
be appointed for districts or groups of Counties in Scotland.
5. That the principle of
compensation for increased fertility of a holding should be recognised, and that
any and every improvement which increases the productiveness of the farm and
adds to its letting value should be compensated, and that equally the Landlord
should have a claim for decreased fertility.
6. That means should be devised
for effectively protecting the interests of the sitting tenant so that his rent
is not raised on his own improvements.
7. That with due safeguards the
restrictions in Leases with regard to cropping and sale of produce should be
swept away.
8. That the practice of saddling
the incoming tenant with the burden of paying the compensation due to the
outgoing tenant should be declared illegal.
9. That it should be made
impossible to contract out of the Act in any way whatever.
10. That a branch of the Board of
Agriculture should be established in Scotland.
It was not till 8th August, 1900,
that an act to amend Agricultural Holdings Act was passed. The chief changes
introduced by this act are as follows:
1. The list of improvements in
the schedule for which the tenant is entitled to compensation is considerably
enlarged.
Mr. Clay considered that all
schedules to the act should be swept away so as to put permanent pasture and
drainage on the same footing as the improvements effected by manuring and
consumption of feeding stuffs. He would have left it to the arbiter to decide
whether the improvements effected by the tenant were real improvements; if not,
the tenant would get no compensation for them.
2. Compensation is allowed for
the consumption of corn produced upon the holding. Up till the date of the act
compensation was only allowed for corn not produced on the holding.
3. Procedure is simplified and a
statutory code is provided for the conduct of arbiters under the act.
This improvement, which is a very
important one, follows the lines of Mr. Clay's suggestion that the procedure
should be made simple and untechnical and that intelligible forms should be
provided from which a tenant could prepare any necessary paper without calling
in legal assistance. The new procedure provided for by the act combined with the
power given to the Board of Agriculture to make up and supply forms has
practically given effect to Mr. Clay's recommendation.
4. An appeal is allowed in the
form of a stated case to the Sheriff and the Court of Session.
This improvement also follows the
suggestion made by Mr. Clay in one of the paragraphs of his recommendations.
Mr. Clay's other recommendations
may be briefly disposed of as follows: — The abolition of claim and counter
claim recommended by him has not been given effect to. The tenant has still to
make his claim, but not now four months prior to the determination of his
tenancy, but before the actual determination of his tenancy, thus doing away
with a substantial grievance which practically led to the dispute eventually
decided by the House of Lords of Black v. Clay. The new act obviates the chance
of any such question being again raised. The new act, however, adopts to some
extent Mr. Clay's suggestion regarding the Landlord's counter claim, and
provides that the landlord must, within a certain time after the appointment of
the arbiters to decide the tenant's claim, give notice of his claim. If he does
so, then all his claims against the tenant must be decided. If he does not do
so, he is left to his common law remedies against the tenant.
No recognition has been made of
the principle of increased fertility and, although it is maintained by everyone
that arbiters have power under the act to award an additional compensation for
the long continued use of manures, a principle which the third recommedation of
the main report encourages, the act still continues to be "murdered by the
arbiters," as was commonly stated in the evidence given before the last
commission.
No compensation has been allowed
by the sitting tenant, but this is a matter upon which Mr. Clay felt very
strongly, as the manner in which his rent at Kerchesters had been raised brought
the matter home to him.
Nothing has been done towards
taking away the restrictions on cropping, nor to make it clear that the incoming
tenant shall not be bound to pay the compensation of the outgoing tenant.
Contracting out is still the
order of the day, and there is hardly any lease now which has not a schedule of
amounts to be awarded in compensation appended to it, all of which are under
what the tenant might reasonably expect he would receive. The tenant cannot
contract wholly out of the act, but if he likes to agree to a substituted
compensation which is in the circumstances fair and reasonable he can do so. As
a matter of fact, an offerer anxious for a farm usually accepts any such
substituted compensation as the landlord's conditions stipulate for, however
unfair and unreasonable.
Another important alteration made
in the new act, and recommended in the main report, was that a landlord should
not now be entitled to claim for any breach of the lease — what is known as a
penal rent,—but should only be allowed to receive the actual damages done by
such breach. This was a matter of great importance to tenants, as formerly there
was always a clause in the lease penalizing them in sometimes as much as five or
six pounds per acre for any breach in the provisions as to cultivation, and this
could by law be exacted or used as a handle against the tenant at his outgoing,
although the breach might have been really in the best interests of the farm and
the landlord.